The EOS 7D will be far to expensive for me. Im not a pro, just a casual hobbyist who want to play around shooting with 35mm dof and doesnt want the hastle of adapters.

The Whilst the D90 has terrible rolling shutter, i can live with it, but the lack of manaul contorl bugs me.

I keep things simple, an dont require a huge number of features. If I was learning film making 'back in the day' I would have had a limited camera, I would have chosen a lens, a film stock (ie iso), and most likely shot at 24fps.

I dont need more than that really!! like I say, I keep it simple.

In the UK a D90 kit is £750. A Gh1 is £1150 so thats a £450 price difference.

The GH1 has full manuall control, but if I can loick the iso/shutter on the d90 i can use a manual app lens and stop up an down (at least as is my understanding).

In all of the shots I took, there were maybe two or three that had obvious rolling shutter issues, but I was fully-zoomed and handheld…the perfect storm. Manual controls worked perfectly and were really nice to have.

I really liked the footage, Stephen, and very impressed at the smooth GH1 footage, especially during the waves (when compared to a lot of shakey handheld 5D clips posted lately).

I'm not so keen on the hard corner vignetting during the tarpon jumps, though.

The only thing missing from the "Day on the Rio Parismina" for me was 'sound'...at certain stages during the action it just screamed out for the noise of the spinning reel, the line being stripped, the tarpon crashing through the waves...and the soft sounds of the water combined with the laughter and thrill from the anglers.

I shot with the D90 but was not impressed. I bought an EOS 5DII, which was great for stills but so so for video so I sold it. I now own a GH1 which is much better than the D90 & 5DII for video. I will also purchase a EOS 7D when available.

For what its worth, the 7D body & the GH1 Kit are about the same price.

Stephen -- great footage; nice example of what's possible with these little cameras. I've been shooting with a GH1 for several months (nothing as nice as your footage though!) but I can see the difference compared to my previous HDV video (has a more mature look and highlights don't seem burnt out, plus the shallow DoF option). Thanks for posting your film.

If you haven't made a decision yet take a serious look at the Canon T1i (Rebel 500D). Although video is full auto only (as designed by Canon) there are some workarounds. You can set aperture manually using the "unlock and twist" method, and you can effect some control over shutter with a set of inexpensive ND filters. I use .6 and .9 for 2 and 3 stops reduction respectively. Stack them together and you have 5 stops reduction.

The "kit" lens, while not one of the best is not a bad starter, and a 50mm F1.8 lens sells for around $100 here in the US and is a tremendous value both as a sharp portrait length/perspective lens but also for great DOF control.

And I have no "rolling shutter" issues with anything I've done with it including video from moving vehicle.

If you have'nt seen this video yet check out this short thread on shallow DOF with the T1i:

Hola, i "rented" a D90 from my dad...but unfortunately i m disappointed for not having the chance to shoot in full HD. So my thought are to buy a DSLR camera next year to achieve full hd images; now i ask: Is Nikon planning to make something really competitive to the 5dmkII?
What about i f i buy a Panasonic GH1, should i use which lenses?Does it shoot in full HD ?

thx and sorry for my newbieness as i m a rookie in the CAMERA WORLD.thx

If you are seriously considering the D90 you should at least glance at the Pentax K-x. It's cheaper, has better low-light performance, has manual aperture available for video, and allows all exposure settings (aperture, shutter and ISO) to be locked during video recording.